"Any kind of popular trend is infinitely more wholesome than listening to old records. It's more important that people know that some kind of pleasure can be derived from things that are around them - rather than to catalogue more stuff - you can do that forever"----Harry Smith ^^^^^^^^^^ "Gather ye rosebuds while ye may / Old Time is still a-flying / And this same flower that smiles today/Tomorrow will be dying"---Robert Herrick

Some records get played, including Drake's ditty about forgetting how much money's he actually made, as support of Mark's argument about "sad rap" / depressive hedonism - proof of the existential emptiness of late capitalism even for those outwardly triumphing in all its fruits of hyper-affluence and prestige symbols.

Generally agree but had a few problems since reading the Rolling Stone Drakeinterview in which he talks, seemingly highly enthused and not the least bit hollow-inside, of how his big dream is to own, or build, the "largest residential swimming pool in the world", i.e. the planet's biggest private swimming pool. Now, nothing against swimming pools - I'm not intrinsically opposed to people owning their own pool -- indeed wouldn't mind having one myself. But to have as your strongest (non-artistic) ambition to own / build the largest swimming pool in the world....

Reminded me of something else I read that Drake said: that his dream was to earn 25 million by the age of 25, and now he's done that, his new dream is 250 million by the age of 30. Not exactly Martin Luther King "I Have A Dream" now is it?

But nor is it dreams as in the dream life, the unconscious. The whole idea of dreams and dreaming in that sense -- nocturnal movies, the dreamwork, symbols to be interpreted, but also the irruption of dream imagery into art, from Surrealism to Monty Python and Terry Gilliam's animations -- that has all faded from the culture. We live in hyper reality not surreality. In a post-repression, post-sublimation, late capitalist society, "dreams" and "dreaming" is secularised and de-mythified; it means wanting to be famous or a billionaire, something that you could do but 99.9 percent won't.

Videogames and CGI have something to do with it as well.

Here's my blurb for Ghosts of My Life:

"Ghosts of My Life confirms that Mark Fisher is our most penetrating
explorer of the connections between pop culture, politics, and personal
life under the affective regime of digital capitalism. The most
admirable qualities of Fisher’s work are its lucidity, reflecting the
urgency of his commitment to communicating ideas; his high expectations
of popular art’s power to challenge, enlighten, and heal; and his
adamant refusal to settle for less."